FIS Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2021 – Men's moguls

Men's moguls
at the FIS Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2021
VenueShymbulak
LocationAlmaty, Kazakhstan
Date8 March
Competitors46 from 15 nations
Winning points87.36
Medalists
gold medal    Canada
silver medal    France
bronze medal    Kazakhstan
← 2019
2023 →

The Men's moguls competition at the FIS Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2021 was held on 8 March 2021.[1][2]

Qualification

The qualification was started at 12:15.[3] The best 18 skiers qualified for the final.

Rank Bib Start
order
Name Country Q1 Q2 Notes
1 2 10 Benjamin Cavet  France 84.95 Q
2 6 8 Mikaël Kingsbury  Canada 82.34 Q
3 5 7 Brodie Summers  Australia 79.99 Q
4 9 18 Nick Page  United States 79.59 Q
5 17 20 Cooper Woods-Topalovic  Australia 78.41 Q
6 12 29 Dmitriy Reikherd  Kazakhstan 76.32 Q
7 8 16 Bradley Wilson  United States 75.69 Q
8 25 2 Laurent Dumais  Canada 75.32 Q
9 13 15 Sacha Theocharis  France 75.08 Q
10 10 22 Dylan Walczyk  United States 73.21 77.53 Q
11 33 38 Olli Penttala  Finland 58.49 77.31 Q
12 18 30 Pavel Kolmakov  Kazakhstan 70.09 77.27 Q
13 35 32 Nikita Novitckii  Russian Ski Federation 74.09 77.07 Q
14 28 26 Albin Holmgren  Sweden 73.25 76.35 Q
15 11 9 Brenden Kelly  Canada 74.40 75.70 Q
16 26 27 Felix Elofsson  Sweden 67.42 74.88 Q
17 3 11 Ludvig Fjällström  Sweden 56.94 74.77 Q
18 31 14 Martin Suire  France 70.84 74.74 Q
19 4 21 Ikuma Horishima  Japan 69.36 74.72
20 1 25 Matt Graham  Australia 73.07 74.49
21 37 12 Thomas Gerken Schofield  Great Britain 71.58 74.41
22 22 24 Kerrian Chunlaud  Canada 69.54 74.22
23 43 44 Mikhail Aleynikov  Russian Ski Federation 73.92 70.94
24 23 17 William Feneley  Great Britain 70.14 73.78
25 29 6 Artem Shuldyakov  Russian Ski Federation 11.80 73.71
26 14 4 Oskar Elofsson  Sweden 73.06 69.61
27 15 5 Kosuke Sugimoto  Japan 72.88 70.90
28 19 23 Jimi Salonen  Finland 72.84 DNF
29 34 35 Jules Escobar  France 71.64 72.27
30 32 41 Takashi Koyama  Japan DNF 72.01
31 7 3 Marco Tadé  Switzerland 71.29 71.91
32 46 36 Mateo Jeannesson  Great Britain 69.57 71.10
33 21 19 Gabriel Dufresne  Canada 70.26 70.65
34 27 13 James Matheson  Australia 42.74 70.64
35 30 34 Alex Lewis  United States 68.71 70.37
36 45 45 Jung Dae-yoon  South Korea 68.69 25.35
37 38 33 Goshin Fujiki  Japan 66.22 67.40
38 42 43 Anton Bondarev  Kazakhstan 66.70 61.39
39 41 46 Sergey Romanov  Kazakhstan 64.76 DNF
40 20 28 Jussi Penttala  Finland 64.67 53.18
41 36 31 Akseli Ahvenainen  Finland 51.01 63.78
42 39 42 Max Willis  Great Britain 63.70 DNF
43 40 39 Massimo Bellucci  Italy 59.58 53.31
44 44 37 Artur Yeremenko  Ukraine 47.20 DNF
45 24 1 Nikita Andreev  Russian Ski Federation DNF 35.45
46 47 40 Andrés Valencia  Mexico DNF 24.06

Final

The final was started at 15:30.[4][5]

Rank Bib Name Country Final 1 Final 2
1st place, gold medalist(s) 6 Mikaël Kingsbury  Canada 85.34 87.36
2nd place, silver medalist(s) 2 Benjamin Cavet  France 82.87 82.43
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 18 Pavel Kolmakov  Kazakhstan 84.09 82.23
4 35 Nikita Novitckii  Russian Ski Federation 81.08 81.34
5 12 Dmitriy Reikherd  Kazakhstan 82.10 78.47
6 25 Laurent Dumais  Canada 80.01 56.05
7 3 Ludvig Fjällström  Sweden 78.98
8 33 Olli Penttala  Finland 77.44
9 13 Sacha Theocharis  France 77.32
10 10 Dylan Walczyk  United States 77.20
11 28 Albin Holmgren  Sweden 76.64
12 26 Felix Elofsson  Sweden 76.28
13 8 Bradley Wilson  United States 75.67
14 31 Martin Suire  France 75.32
15 17 Cooper Woods-Topalovic  Australia 74.24
16 5 Brodie Summers  Australia 71.61
17 11 Brenden Kelly  Canada 71.58
18 9 Nick Page  United States DNF

References